Search results for "MPL"

showing 10 items of 21777 documents

Isolation and characterization of a Vitis vinifera transcription factor, VvWRKY1, and its effect on responses to fungal pathogens in transgenic tobac…

2007

International audience; Pathogen attack represents a major problem for viticulture and for agriculture in general. At present, the use of phytochemicals is more and more restrictive, and therefore it is becoming essential to control disease by having a thorough knowledge of resistance mechanisms. The present work focused on the trans-regulatory proteins potentially involved in the control of the plant defence response, the WRKY proteins. A full-length cDNA, designated VvWRKY1, was isolated from a grape berry library (Vitis vinifera L. cv. Cabernet Sauvignon). It encodes a polypeptide of 151 amino acids whose structure is characteristic of group IIc WRKY proteins. VvWRKY1 gene expression in …

0106 biological sciencesGénomique et Biotechnologie des FruitsPhysiologyTransgenesalicylic acid[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Amino Acid MotifsMolecular Sequence DataWRKY transcription factorPlant ScienceGenetically modified cropsBiology01 natural sciences03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundplant resistance to pathogensGene Expression Regulation PlantComplementary DNABotanyGene expressionTobacco[SDV.BV]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal BiologyVitisCloning MolecularPathogen030304 developmental biologyPlant Proteins2. Zero hungerGeneticschemistry.chemical_classification0303 health sciencesBase SequenceFungifood and beveragesPlants Genetically ModifiedWRKY protein domainImmunity InnateAmino acid[SDV.BV.PEP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal Biology/Phytopathology and phytopharmacychemistrySalicylic acid010606 plant biology & botanyTranscription Factors
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Genome reduction and potential metabolic complementation of the dual endosymbionts in the whitefly Bemisia tabaci

2015

Background The whitefly Bemisia tabaci is an important agricultural pest with global distribution. This phloem-sap feeder harbors a primary symbiont, “Candidatus Portiera aleyrodidarum”, which compensates for the deficient nutritional composition of its food sources, and a variety of secondary symbionts. Interestingly, all of these secondary symbionts are found in co-localization with the primary symbiont within the same bacteriocytes, which should favor the evolution of strong interactions between symbionts. Results In this paper, we analyzed the genome sequences of the primary symbiont Portiera and of the secondary symbiont Hamiltonella in the B. tabaci Mediterranean (MED) species in orde…

0106 biological sciencesHamiltonellaCandidatus Portiera aleyrodidarum[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Molecular Sequence DataWhiteflyPortiera010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGenomeHemiptera03 medical and health sciencesMetabolic complementationSymbiosisEnterobacteriaceaeBotanyGeneticsAnimalsAmino AcidsSymbiosisIn Situ Hybridization Fluorescence030304 developmental biology2. Zero hungerGenetics0303 health sciencesEndosymbiontGenomebiologyfungifood and beveragesHigh-Throughput Nucleotide SequencingDNASequence Analysis DNAVitaminsbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationEnterobacteriaceaeHemipteraWhiteflyComplementationHalomonadaceaeGlobal distribution[INFO.INFO-BI]Computer Science [cs]/Bioinformatics [q-bio.QM]Genome BacterialMetabolic Networks and PathwaysBiotechnologyResearch ArticleBMC Genomics
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Chemical composition, herbicidal and antifungal activity of Satureja cuneifolia essential oils from Spain

2016

The chemical composition of essential oils from Satureja cuneifolia growing in east Spain was analyzed by GC, GC/MS. Forty-five compounds accounting for 99.1% of the total oil were identified. Camphor (47.6%), followed by camphene (13.6%) were the main compounds. Their herbicidal and antifungal activity was tested in vitro against three weeds (Amaranthus hybridus, Portulaca oleracea and Conyza canadensis) and eleven common pathogenic or saprophytic fungi (Phytophthora citrophthora, P. palmivora, Pythium litorale, Verticillium dahlia, Rhizoctonia solani, Penicillium hirsutum, Colletotrichum gloeosporioides, Phaeoacremonium aleophilum, Phaemoniella chlamydospora, Cylindrocarpon liriodendri a…

0106 biological sciencesHerbicidal activityAntifungal AgentsPhytophthora citrophthoraAmaranthus hybridusBOTANICAPlant WeedsGerminationPlant Science01 natural sciencesEssential oillaw.inventionRhizoctonia solanichemistry.chemical_compoundlawDrug DiscoveryOils VolatileAntifungal activityEssential oilSatureja cuneifoliaPharmacologyCylindrocarponBIOLOGIA VEGETALbiologyHerbicidesPlant ExtractsSaturejaFungiGeneral MedicineVerticilliumbiology.organism_classification0104 chemical sciencesPhaeoacremonium aleophilum010404 medicinal & biomolecular chemistryHorticultureComplementary and alternative medicinechemistrySpainCamphene010606 plant biology & botany
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New Hettangian tracks from the Causses Basin (Lozère, southern France) complement the poor fossil record of earliest Jurassic crocodylomorphs in Euro…

2017

International audience; A new vertebrate ichnological assemblage is described from the Hettangian Dolomitic Formation of the Causses Basin, at Le Serre (Lozère, southern France). We report tracks that complement the poor fossil record of lowermost Jurassic crocodylomorphs in Europe. Tetradactyl pes and pentadactyl manus imprints form a unique trackway. Traces are ascribed to Batrachopus isp. and they represent the third occurrence of this ichnogenus in European Hettangian geological formations. This is the first report of Batrachopus in Hettangian deposits of the Causses Basin. The tracks share some similarities with Batrachopus deweyi previously described from the Sinemurian of the Causses…

0106 biological sciencesHettangian010506 paleontologyFossil Recordsouthern FranceCrocodylomorph tracksStructural basin[ SDU.STU.ST ] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Stratigraphy010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesComplement (complexity)PaleontologyLower Jurassicdinosaur tracks[SDU.STU.ST]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/StratigraphyAssemblage (archaeology)14. Life underwaterGeneral Agricultural and Biological Sciences[SDU.STU.PG]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/PaleontologyCausses BasinGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciences[ SDU.STU.PG ] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Paleontology
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Managing the Historical Agricultural Landscape in the Sicilian Anthropocene Context. The Landscape of the Valley of the Temples as a Time Capsule

2021

The debate over whether we are entering the Anthropocene Epoch focuses on the unequal consumption of the Earth system’s resources at the expense of nature’s regenerative abilities. To find a new point of balance with nature, it is useful to look back in time to understand how the so-called “Great Acceleration”—the surge in the consumption of the planet’s resources—hastened the arrival of the Anthropocene. Some particular places—for various reasons—survived the Great Acceleration and, as time capsules, have preserved more or less intact some landscape features that have disappeared elsewhere. How can we enhance these living archives that have come down to us? Through the analysis of the case…

0106 biological sciencesHistorymedia_common.quotation_subjectGeography Planning and Development0211 other engineering and technologiesTJ807-830Context (language use)02 engineering and technologyarchaeological heritageManagement Monitoring Policy and LawConsumption (sociology)Settore ICAR/21 - UrbanisticaTD194-195010603 evolutionary biology01 natural scienceslocal developmentRenewable energy sourcesValle dei TempliAnthropoceneAnthropoceneGE1-350Kolymbethramedia_commonSustainable developmentsustainable developmentEnvironmental effects of industries and plantsRenewable Energy Sustainability and the Environment021107 urban & regional planningEnvironmental ethicslandscapecultural heritagelanguage.human_languageCultural heritageEarth system scienceEnvironmental sciencesterritorial planninglanguagePsychological resilienceSicilianlandscape; Anthropocene; Valle dei Templi; sustainable development; territorial planning; cultural heritage; archaeological heritage; local development; Agrigento; KolymbethraAgrigentoSustainability; Volume 13; Issue 8; Pages: 4480
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Preferential induction of 20S proteasome subunits during elicitation of plant defense reactions: towards the characterization of "plant defense prote…

2003

Plants have evolved efficient mechanisms to resist pathogens. The earliest defense response is the hypersensitive response (HR) considered as the main step leading to plant systemic acquired resistance (SAR) that protects the whole plant against a large spectrum of pathogens. We showed previously that elicitation of defense reactions in tobacco cells by cryptogein, a proteinaceous elicitor of plant defense reactions, leads to a rapid and differential accumulation of transcripts corresponding to genes encoding defense-induced (din) subunits of 20S proteasome: beta1din, alpha3din and alpha6din.Here, expression of these three subunits was investigated by Northern blotting and by Western blotti…

0106 biological sciencesHypersensitive responseProteasome Endopeptidase Complex[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Protein subunitBlotting WesternGene ExpressionBiology01 natural sciencesBiochemistryMixed Function OxygenasesFungal Proteins03 medical and health sciencesMultienzyme ComplexesTobaccoPlant defense against herbivoryElectrophoresis Gel Two-DimensionalNorthern blotComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesAlgal ProteinsProteinsCell BiologyBlotting NorthernMolecular biologyCell biologyElicitor[SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio]BlotPlant LeavesTobacco Mosaic VirusCysteine EndopeptidasesProteasomeEnzyme InductionREPONSE DE LA PLANTESystemic acquired resistance010606 plant biology & botanyPeptide HydrolasesThe international journal of biochemistrycell biology
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Controversy over the Mode of Growth of Cambial Cylinder

2021

Based on mathematical modelling, this review article describes the mechanism of expansion in the circumference of vascular cambium due to radial growth leading to increase in the tree-trunk diameter, and emphasizes upon the huge difference in the rate of symplastic growth of cambial initials in two different directions, viz. radial and circumferential. On the basis of anatomical evidence regarding the role of symplastic and intrusive growths, the long-standing hypothesis that the intrusive growth contributes to the increase of cambium circumference has been falsified. It has been shown with the help of mathematical calculations as well as anatomical observations that only symplastic growth …

0106 biological sciencesInitial layerSymplastic growthPlant ScienceAnatomyBiologyCircumference010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGrowth in girthRadial growthAnticlinal and periclinal divisionsVascular cambiumCylinderIntrusive growthVascular cambiumCambiumEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics010606 plant biology & botanyBotanical Review
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Role of lignin and sodium carbonate on the swelling behavior of black liquor droplets during combustion

2018

AbstractA partial removal of lignin from black liquor (BL) by carbonation and lignin precipitation was studied. In lignin-lean BL droplets during combustion in a laboratory furnace at 800°C in stagnant air, the maximum swelling was decreased. This observation was interpreted as showing that the lignin content decrement is due mainly to removal of higher molar mass (HMM) lignin and that the Na2CO3content of the BL is increased. Stepwise precipitation experiments with industrial softwood and hardwood kraft BLs by carbonation (resulting in pH decrement from 13 to 9) indicated that a fraction of HMM lignin (MM >10 kDa) with a higher amount of carbohydrates precipitated more prominently and e…

0106 biological sciencesInorganic chemistrymacromolecular substancesCombustion01 natural sciencescomplex mixturesBiomaterialschemistry.chemical_compound010608 biotechnologymedicineLigninchemical recoveryhigh definition video camerasodium carbonatekraft lignin040101 forestryMolar massChemistryfungimoolimassatechnology industry and agriculturefood and beveragesligniinimustalipeä04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesChemical recoverymaximum swelling of dropletsdroplet swellingKraft process0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesSwellingmedicine.symptomSodium carbonateBlack liquor
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Exploiting chemical ecology to manage hyperparasitoids in biological control of arthropod pests

2020

Abstract Insect hyperparasitoids are fourth trophic level organisms that commonly occur in terrestrial food webs, yet they are relatively understudied. These top‐carnivores can disrupt biological pest control by suppressing the populations of their parasitoid hosts, leading to pest outbreaks, especially in confined environments such as greenhouses where augmentative biological control is used. There is no effective eco‐friendly strategy that can be used to control hyperparasitoids. Recent advances in the chemical ecology of hyperparasitoid foraging behavior have opened opportunities for manipulating these top‐carnivores in such a way that biological pest control becomes more efficient. We p…

0106 biological sciencesIntegrated pest managementBiological pest controlReview01 natural sciencespush-pullhyperparasitoid foraginginfochemical-based strategieLaboratory of Entomology/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/industry_innovation_and_infrastructureinfochemical‐based strategiesTrophic levelEcologyPlan_S-Compliant-TAParasietenEnvironmental resource managementherbivore‐induced plant volatilespush‐pullGeneral MedicineChemical ecologyfourth trophic level organismherbivore-induced plant volatileinternationalSDG 9 - IndustryFood ChainForagingDuurzame gewasbeschermingEarly detectionmultitrophic interactionsBiologyHost-Parasite InteractionsGeleedpotigenAnimalsmultitrophic interactionfourth trophic level organismsInnovationPest Control BiologicalArthropodsbusiness.industryherbivore-induced plant volatilesLaboratorium voor Entomologiebiology.organism_classification010602 entomologyInsect Scienceand InfrastructureSDG 9 - Industry Innovation and InfrastructurePEST analysisArthropodEPSinfochemical-based strategiesbusinessAgronomy and Crop Science010606 plant biology & botanyPest Management Science
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Functional responses of intertidal bivalves to repeated sub-lethal, physical disturbances

2019

In coastal habitats, physical disturbances of benthic organisms can be caused by natural events like wave-born objects and human activity like trampling, and these disturbances can be sub-lethal (e.g., resulting in the organism's displacement). We know little of how sessile organisms respond to physical disturbances such as displacements. Using Mytilaster minimus, a mussel that is native to the Mediterranean Sea, we tested how byssus production and oxygen uptake rates changed in response to different frequencies of disturbance events (10-60 events h-1). Mussels increased oxygen uptake rates but not byssus production with increasing disturbance frequencies (50-60 events h-1). Our results sho…

0106 biological sciencesIntertidal zoneAquatic ScienceBiologyOceanography010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesMediterranean SeaAnimalsHumansHuman ActivitiesEcosystemEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyfungiMytilaster minimusGeneral MedicineMusselPollutionBivalviaOxygenByssusDisturbance (ecology)HabitatBenthic zoneTramplingMarine Environmental Research
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